I was typing that one-handed last night and was kinda short on time, so maybe I can elaborate a bit now.
When you have a kid who has been kept ignorant of anything sex-related, it sets them up for a world of trouble. I've heard horrifying stories of women who were kept ignorant right up until their wedding nights! These women either ended up being practically raped by their much more savvy husbands, or hiding locked in the bathroom with their husbands pleading for them to come out! Horrifying all around.
And when you have naiive and sheltered youth, it is easy for somebody with ulterior motives to lie to or manipulate them. The victim doesn't have to be mentally challenged, even.
And there is always the risk that somebody who has been denied real facts will end up picking up "facts" anyway- on the street or on the playground, from other misinformed youth. Which means that myths like "You can't get pregnant if you do it standing up" or "douching with coke kills sperm" or "You can't get pregnant if it's your first time" are still being spread around and believed. End result? Kids who hear this stuff and believe it tend to find themselves in a world of trouble, pregnant or catching a disease. Perhaps sex-ed classes need a "mythbusters" segment.
When you have a kid who has been kept ignorant of anything sex-related, it sets them up for a world of trouble. I've heard horrifying stories of women who were kept ignorant right up until their wedding nights! These women either ended up being practically raped by their much more savvy husbands, or hiding locked in the bathroom with their husbands pleading for them to come out! Horrifying all around.
And when you have naiive and sheltered youth, it is easy for somebody with ulterior motives to lie to or manipulate them. The victim doesn't have to be mentally challenged, even.
And there is always the risk that somebody who has been denied real facts will end up picking up "facts" anyway- on the street or on the playground, from other misinformed youth. Which means that myths like "You can't get pregnant if you do it standing up" or "douching with coke kills sperm" or "You can't get pregnant if it's your first time" are still being spread around and believed. End result? Kids who hear this stuff and believe it tend to find themselves in a world of trouble, pregnant or catching a disease. Perhaps sex-ed classes need a "mythbusters" segment.
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